Your preceding page stated that I was now part of the problem … no doubt about that! How can I discuss anything I cannot read (or hear)? Your web construct fails to move me through the pages of commentary! I can do a far better job of talking to myself without this!!!
Sonny raises a good point, and one that echoes a comment the Deutsche Welle radio reporter raised yesterday during our interview: to the uninitiated, a weblog seems like a strange, disorganized thing. It doesn’t read like a book or a newspaper, and unless you’re “in the flow” of the blog — reading it every once in a while, or “constantly” — it can be a disjointing experience to jump inside of.
This is mitigated somewhat by the fact that most blogs share a few common features: bite-sized “posts” displayed in reverse chronological order, links to comments and “trackback” (basically a notice on weblog A that a comment has appeared about it on weblog B), “permalinks” to each post (allowing just that story to be displayed, and thus linked to as a chunk of independent text). As such, if you can come to understand the format of one blog, you stand a good chance of other blogs making much more sense.
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Your preceding page stated
Your preceding page stated that I was now part of the problem … no doubt about that! How can I discuss anything I cannot read (or hear)? Your web construct fails to move me through the pages of commentary! I can do a far better job of talking to myself without this!!!
I’m outta here! I’ve got
I’m outta here! I’ve got better things to do with my time than this “conversation” with my computer!!!
Sonny raises a good point,
Sonny raises a good point, and one that echoes a comment the Deutsche Welle radio reporter raised yesterday during our interview: to the uninitiated, a weblog seems like a strange, disorganized thing. It doesn’t read like a book or a newspaper, and unless you’re “in the flow” of the blog — reading it every once in a while, or “constantly” — it can be a disjointing experience to jump inside of.
This is mitigated somewhat by the fact that most blogs share a few common features: bite-sized “posts” displayed in reverse chronological order, links to comments and “trackback” (basically a notice on weblog A that a comment has appeared about it on weblog B), “permalinks” to each post (allowing just that story to be displayed, and thus linked to as a chunk of independent text). As such, if you can come to understand the format of one blog, you stand a good chance of other blogs making much more sense.
see http://groups.msn.com/St
see http://groups.msn.com/St-Peter…
see http://www.stpetersburg
see http://www.stpetersburg.it/
see http://www.san
see http://www.san-pietroburgo.inf…
Hello people from http://www
Hello people from http://www.kyiv.it
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